Page:The Remains of Hesiod the Ascraean, including the Shield of Hercules - Elton (1815).djvu/21

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DISSERTATION

ON

THE LIFE AND ÆRA

OF

HESIOD,

HIS POEMS, AND MYTHOLOGY.



SECTION I.

ON THE LIFE OF HESIOD.

It is remarked by Velleius Paterculus (Hist. lib. i.) that "Hesiod had avoided the negligence into which Homer fell, by attesting both his country and his parents: but that of his country he had made most reproachful mention; on account of the fine which she had imposed on him." There are sufficient coincidences in the poems of Hesiod, now extant, to explain the grounds of this assertion of Paterculus; but the statement is loose and incorrect.

As to the mention of his country, if by country we are to suppose the place of his birth, it can only be understood by implication, and that not with certainty. Hesiod indeed relates that his father migrated from Cuma in Æolia, to Ascra, a Bœotian village at the foot of mount Helicon; but we are left to conjecture whether he himself was born at Cuma or at